(dissenting). We granted rehearing *377following our decision in Frankenmuth Mutual Ins Co v Keeley, 433 Mich 525; 447 NW2d 691 (1989), in which we held that an insurer is liable for a judgment in excess of its policy limits without regard to the insured’s ability to pay when the insurer’s bad-faith refusal to settle results in the excess judgment. 433 Mich 1226 (1989). Although I would reaffirm the rule of law and rationale set forth in that majority opinion, I would now affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals and would hold that, under the facts of this case, Frankenmuth is not liable to Keeley for the excess judgment.
i
At issue when we granted leave to appeal was whether Frankenmuth Mutual Insurance Company should be held liable to Charles Keeley for damages resulting from a judgment entered against him in the principal action. In the underlying tort suit, a judgment of $250,000 plus costs and interest was entered against Charles Keeley for the shooting of Joey Boone, who was rendered a quadriplegic.
Frankenmuth Mutual insured Charles Keeley through a homeowner’s policy issued to Charles’ mother, Wilma Keeley. On the day that Boone filed his tort suit, Frankenmuth filed the present action seeking a declaratory judgment that the shooting was intended and that Charles Keeley had no rights under the policy. Subsequently, the Keeleys and Joey Boone joined forces and counterclaimed.
Wilma Keeley counterclaimed for attorney fees, which, she alleged, resulted from Frankenmuth’s bad-faith failure to settle the tort suit. The trial court rejected Frankenmuth’s motion for summary *378disposition against the counterclaim and awarded $4,152 in attorney fees. By awarding attorney fees, the court held that Frankenmuth’s failure to settle was done in bad faith. 433 Mich 531. See also 433 Mich 545, n 1 (Boyle, J., concurring).
Charles Keeley also counterclaimed for damages resulting from Frankenmuth’s bad-faith failure to settle the tort suit. Frankenmuth’s policy provided liability coverage of up to $50,000. Charles Keeley alleged that Frankenmuth refused in bad faith to settle the tort case, despite several compromise offers of $50,000. Consequently, he alleged that the $250,000 tort judgment, which was $200,000 in excess of Frankenmuth’s liability coverage and included interest and costs, resulted from Frankenmuth’s bad-faith failure to settle. 433 Mich 530-531.
Frankenmuth also moved for summary disposition against Charles Keeley’s counterclaim. The trial court granted the motion and held that any damages Frankenmuth owed Charles Keeley resulting from Frankenmuth’s bad-faith failure to settle the tort suit were limited by what Joey Boone could have recovered from Charles Keeley absent insurance coverage: those assets not exempt from legal process. 433 Mich 532. See also Stockdale v Jamison, 416 Mich 217; 330 NW2d 389 (1982).
The Court of Appeals unanimously affirmed1 and remanded the case to the trial court to determine the extent of Charles Keeley’s assets not exempt from legal process and to enter judgment in that amount. 433 Mich 532. See also 433 Mich 546-547 (Levin, J., dissenting).
Subsequently, we granted leave to appeal lim*379ited to whether the lower courts applied the correct measure of damages to Charles Keeley’s counterclaim. 430 Mich 857 (1988). We concluded the lower courts did not, and held that when an insurer’s bad-faith refusal to settle results in a judgment in excess of its policy limits, the measure of damages is the amount of the excess judgment, and that the insured is not required to first make payment or to have the capacity to pay the judgment in order to recover damages from the insurer. 433 Mich 544. Consequently, we rejected Frankenmuth Mutual’s argument that an insured is injured and incurs pecuniary losses recoverable as contract damages only by paying or having the ability to pay the judgment. We reasoned that, in the bad-faith failure-to-settle context, the insured’s injury and right to compensation should turn not upon his financial status, but rather upon the consequences flowing from the excess judgment itself,2 which "constitute actual damages in the most traditional sense.” 433 Mich 540.
Following our decision, we granted rehearing. 433 Mich 1226 (1989).
ii
Frankenmuth first argues on rehearing that we should abandon the rule set forth in our previous opinion and instead adopt the rule articulated by the dissent. See 433 Mich 546 (Levin, J., dissenting). Under the majority opinion, Frankenmuth maintains that, contrary to traditional contract *380theory, damages would not be awarded as compensation for an actual economic injury unless the insured first has the ability to pay the judgment. By awarding the full amount of the excess judgment without regard to the extent of the insured’s assets not exempt from legal process, Frankenmuth claims that there is no reasonable relationship between the measure of damages, which is the excess judgment, and any loss that in fact has been incurred as a result of the insurer’s breach of its contractual duty to settle a claim in good faith. Consequently, Frankenmuth reasons that the measure of damages more closely resembles an award of liquidated damages, which, under these circumstances, would be punitive in nature and should be held unenforceable. The philosophical ramification of this decision, Frankenmuth concludes, is that this Court has invaded the province of the Legislature by seeking to penalize the insurance industry as a whole for what this Court misperceives to be an industry-wide pattern of abusive business practices. I disagree.
The rule that Frankenmuth proposes and that the majority now adopts will result in a windfall for the insurer and would fail to compensate an insured for its lost expectation interest. Although the majority quite properly would not require a judgment debtor under these circumstances to pay the judgment as a precondition to recovering damages, the "compromise” (see 433 Mich 565) misses the mark in concluding that a judgment debtor lacking the ability to pay the judgment has incurred no economic loss for which contract damages may be awarded.
Contract damages, as the majority and the parties properly note, are typically awarded to compensate for a party’s lost expectation interest resulting in economic damages. 433 Mich 556-557. *381The general goal of contract damages is " 'to place the aggrieved party in the same economic position he would have had if the contract had been performed.’ . . . [Calamari & Perillo, Contracts (3d ed), § 14-4, p 591.]” 433 Mich 557, n 20 (Levin, J., dissenting). (Emphasis added.)
In the context of the case before this Court, the insurer’s duty to settle a tort suit in good faith forms a part of the party’s expectation interest, which is the contractual right to be free from a judgment in excess of the policy limits resulting from the insurer’s bad-faith failure to settle. The only way to place the insured in the same position as if the contract had been performed and to restore to the insured what was fairly bargained for by paying insurance premiums is for the insurer to be held liable for the excess judgment without regard to the insured’s ability to pay. I thus again reject the view adopted by other jurisdictions that the inquiry should rest upon the insured’s financial status. Instead, I merely would hold that when an insurer has breached its duty to settle in good faith and the insurer’s bad-faith failure to settle results in a judgment in excess of the policy’s limits, the insurer is liable for the excess judgment regardless of the insured’s ability to pay the judgment.
hi
Frankenmuth’s second argument on rehearing is that, on the facts of this case, it should not be held liable to Charles Keeley for damages under the rule of law I would reaffirm today. Frankenmuth contends, and I agree, that our holding requires Charles Keeley to establish three elements in order to recover damages. First, the insurer’s failure to settle was in bad faith. Second, the insurer’s *382bad-faith failure to settle resulted in a judgment in excess of the policy’s limits. Third, the insured has been damaged.
Frankenmuth claims that the second element, causation, had not been established on the record before this Court when leave to appeal was granted. In other words, Frankenmuth argues that the lower courts had not yet determined whether any bad faith on the part of Frankenmuth resulted in the excess judgment.
Subsequent to oral argument before this Court on March 7, 1990, I agreed with Frankenmuth that our previous opinion was limited to determining the correct measure of damages to be applied in a failure-to-settle case. Consequently, I also agreed that, on the record then before this Court, the causation issue had not yet been decided and that a remand to the trial court would be necessary. Our Court then remanded the case and ordered the trial court to determine whether Frankenmuth’s acts of bad faith caused the excess judgment to be entered against Charles Keeley. 434 Mich 1206 (1990). We also retained jurisdiction.
On remand, the Genesee Circuit Court determined at a hearing held April 17, 1990, that Frankenmuth’s acts of bad faith did not result in the excess judgment entered against Charles Keeley. As to the issue of bad-faith conduct, the trial court found that Frankenmuth acted in bad faith when it failed to discharge Mr. Buck, whom Frankenmuth had retained to represent the Keeleys in the tort action, when he breached his duty of fidelity by providing Frankenmuth with detailed information detrimental to the Keeleys’ defense and, ultimately, their claim for insurance coverage.
More importantly, however, the trial court also ruled that Frankenmuth’s acts of bad faith did not *383result in the excess judgment. The trial court concluded that, although Frankenmuth also acted in bad faith by initially failing to disclose the full amount of insurance coverage, Frankenmuth did not act in bad faith by waiting to file the declaratory judgment action until Boone first filed his tort suit. Even though Frankenmuth acted with "over-caution” and failed to investigate the claim as early as it should have, the trial court could not conclude that Frankenmuth’s failure to settle before the trial court decided the declaratory judgment action caused the $250,000 judgment in the underlying suit. >
Following the trial court’s findings delivered from the bench, Charles Keeley moved for reconsideration. The trial court denied reconsideration in a written opinion issued May 23, 1990. The court analyzed the issue of bad faith in light of the twelve factors set forth in Commercial Union Ins Co v Liberty Mutual Ins Co, 426 Mich 127, 138-139; 393 NW2d 161 (1986), and again found that Frankenmuth’s acts of bad faith did not cause the judgment in the principal tort suit.
The parties filed supplemental briefs in this Court to address the circuit court’s findings on remand. The original Court of Appeals opinion held that appellant was entitled to recover from the appellee for damages resulting from appellee’s bad-faith conduct. The Supreme Court denied leave to appeal on the issue of bad faith. Thus, appellant contends, the Court of Appeals decision remained the law of the case on the issue of bad faith. The trial court, therefore, violated the law of the case doctrine in issuing its new findings inconsistent with the original ruling of the Court of Appeals.
Appellee, however, asserts that the case remained pending before this Court, and so the law *384of the case doctrine is inapplicable. I agree. The original Court of Appeals decision did not constitute the law of the case. Rather, this Court remanded the case to the trial court in order to determine the issue of causation. The law of the case announced in this Court supersedes the intermediate Court’s opinion. See Johnson v White, 430 Mich 47, 53; 420 NW2d 87 (1988).
Appellant next contends that the trial judge’s findings regarding causation are clearly erroneous. A review of the evidence in this case demonstrates that the judge’s findings are not clearly error.
CONCLUSION
I would hold that an insurer is liable for a judgment in excess of its policy limits without regard to the insured’s ability to pay when the insurer’s bad-faith refusal to settle results in the excess judgment. However, because the trial court on remand found that Frankenmuth’s acts of bad faith did not result in the excess judgment, Charles Keeley cannot establish causation under the rule I would reaffirm today. Consequently, I would hold that Frankenmuth is not liable to Charles Keeley for damages resulting from the judgment entered against him in the underlying tort action. I would therefore affirm the trial court’s order granting Frankenmuth’s motion for summary disposition against Charles Keeley’s counterclaim for damages.
Cavanagh, J., concurred with Archer, J.Frankenmuth Mutual Ins Co v Keeley, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, decided August 19, 1987 (Docket No. 89615).
.We, however, are in express agreement with the majority of jurisdictions that has held that an insured person with little or no assets suffers injury when an excess judgment is obtained against him. Such a judgment will potentially impair his credit, force him into bankruptcy, diminish his reputation, subject his outright property to lien, and immediately subject any future earnings to possible garnishment. [433 Mich 540.]